Medicine & USMLE

Sotalol

2,621 views
Antiarrhythmic Drugs (New)
  1. Adenosine
  2. Class 3 Antiarrhythmics - Dofetilide & Ibutilide
  3. Class 1A Antiarrhythmics
  4. Class 1B Antiarrhythmics
  5. Class 1C Antiarrhythmics
  6. Class 2 Antiarrhythmics
  7. Sotalol
  8. Class 3 Antiarrhythmics - Amiodarone
  9. Class 4 Antiarrhythmics
  10. Digoxin

Sotalol

Subscribe to watch this premium Sotalol mnemonic in the Antiarrhythmic Drugs (New) playlist.

Subscribe to watch this premium mnemonic

Summary

Sotalol is an antiarrhythmic drug that is unique for having both Class 2 and Class 3 antiarrhythmic properties. That said, the class 3 effects predominate at normal doses of the drug.

As a class 3 drug, sotalol acts primarily on non-nodal tissue to block potassium channels. This markedly prolongs the repolarization of heart cells, increases the length of the ERP, prolongs the AP duration, and increases the QT interval.

As a class 2 drug, sotalol is a beta blocker that slows pacemaking at the SA node and slows conduction at the AV node.

As an antiarrhythmic, sotalol is clinically used to treat Atrial Flutter as well as A-Fib, in which it is primarily used for rhythm control. Sotalol can also be used to treat ventricular arrhythmias.

Side effects of sotalol include excessive beta blockade and a risk of causing Torsades de Pointes.

Key Points

  • Sotalol
    • Drug Class
      • Class 2 Antiarrhythmic
      • Class 3 Antiarrhythmic
        • Class 3 effects predominate at normal therapeutic doses
    • Clinical Use
      • Treats A-Fib (atrial fibrillation)
        • Used for rhythm control
          • May be used for pharmacologic cardioversion (rare) as well as maintenance of normal sinus rhythm after electrical cardioversion (common)
        • While sotalol has some rate control effects, it is not administered for this purpose. Sotalol is rarely ever used in isolation for rate control (pure class 2 beta blockers like metoprolol are preferred)
      • Treats Atrial Flutter
      • Treats Ventricular tachycardia
    • Mechanism
      • Class 3 Mechanisms
        • Primarily acts at non-nodal tissue
          • As a beta blocker, sotalol has nodal effects, but it’s primary action is on non-nodal cardiomyocytes
        • Blocks Potassium (K+) channels
          • This is a class 3 antiarrhythmic effect
        • Markedly prolongs repolarization
        • Increases effective refractory period (ERP)
        • Increases AP duration
        • Prolongs QT interval
          • Creates risk for early after-depolarizations and Torsades de Pointes
      • Class 2 Mechanisms
        • Beta-blocker
          • Blocks beta-1 receptors
          • Reduces cAMP and calcium influx, primarily at nodal tissue
        • Slows SA node pacemaker function
        • Slows AV node conduction
    • Side Effects
      • Causes Long QT (Torsades de Pointes risk)
        • All drugs that increase QT interval increase the risk of early after-depolarizations causing ventricular arrhythmias like Torsades de Pointes
        • Avoid in patients with congenital or acquired long QT syndrome
      • Excessive beta-blockade